Partly Cloudy
70°
Dekalb, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

On the record ... with Laurie Emmer

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 3)

MW: Where were you in Afghanistan?
LE: I ended up at Kandahar. I was on the third rotation and we saw the Rangers’ handiwork. …We were still picking up their bullet casings off the runway so aircraft could land.

MW: What kinds of casualties were you seeing then?
LE: When I went in, I think most of the casualties were Afghans-on-Afghans. We were getting two medevacs a day of those. We were getting some Special Forces casualties in because they would ambush our Special Forces. We had a big clinic with an emergency room and an operating room set up.

MW: What is the civilian equivalent of an Army medic?
LE: It’s kind of an EMT, or an EMT plus. Maybe it’s between an EMT and a paramedic. There are things that medics do that EMTs on the outside can’t do. One of the complaints that medics have when they get out is that can’t get jobs because of credentialing. They can give IVs as medics but when they get out, they aren’t credentialed to do anything on the outside (civilian world). They have to go back to school all over again.

MW: That doesn’t help much with the unemployment rate among veterans.
LE: Yes, very high. I have been to Congress three times with a group I work with to talk to members of Congress about transition and employment issues.

MW: What can you tell me about Clay Hunt?
LE: I worked with Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, and the first time I went on Storm the Hill (Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C.) he was one of the guys I went with. He was a Marine. We were talking a lot about the (Veterans Administration) and their backlogs. He was a really nice guy. We talked about (post-traumatic stress disorder) a lot. On my second trip to Congress, I was on Facebook at 6 in the morning and (my roommate and I) were reading posts on his Facebook from his family saying that he took his life. We both said “What? What?” …He had issues with unemployment, he had trouble finding a job, he had PTSD, and he just wasn’t getting anywhere. The veteran suicide rate is still high. In fact another veteran I served with in the 90s took his life three weeks ago. It’s just not something that’s being dealt with. …That’s one of the reasons I was going to Capitol Hill to push the employment issue.


Reader Poll

Have you ever contributed to a Kickstarter project?

Yes
No, but I would give to the right project
No, and I wouldn't consider it